Illustre et Inconnu : Comment Jacques Jaujard a sauvé le Louvre

(téléfilm)
  • France Illustre et inconnu (plus)
France, 2014, 57 min

Réalisation:

Jean-Pierre Devillers

Acteurs·trices:

Mathieu Amalric (narrateur), Quentin Baillot, Jeanne Boitel (i.a.), Joseph Goebbels (i.a.), Hermann Göring (i.a.), Adolf Hitler (i.a.)

Résumés(1)

The Man who Saved the Louvre tells the story of a few good men and women who under the leadership of Jacques Jaujard resisted against the Third Reich's systematic campaign to plunder Europe's treasures through theft, confiscation, and forced sales. Between 1939 and 1945, Jaujard stood up to Hermann Goering's looting task force and its Vichy Regime accomplice to save state-owned and private artworks. Shifting his mental gear to an underground Resistance mode, he turned his inside knowledge of the administrative machinery into a fearsome strategy, using all to tricks in the book to stall, trespass and disregard orders without getting caught. (Film Europe)

(plus)

Critiques (1)

angel74 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais An unconventionally conceived documentary, in which lesser-known period footage is tastefully interspersed with animations. It is certainly worth seeing how the rescue of more than four thousand art treasures was carried out, which would otherwise have been taken by the Nazis. It is almost beyond belief that such a huge number of masterpieces could be moved without the slightest damage, and in many cases, it was a very risky transport. Let the memory of Jacques Jaujard be honored. ()